Earlier this evening in London the First Night of the Proms took place, beginning 8 weeks of concerts in the world's greatest classical music festival. The finest orchestras visit to present performances, as they have for 119 years.

All concerts are broadcast live on BBC Radio 3 and most are available on demand for the following 7 days. The opening concert featured a nautical theme with Britten's Four Sea Interludes and the massive Vaughan Williams Sea Symphony. Pianist Steven Hough was featured in a performance of the Rachmaninoff Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini. This is available for 7 days at the BBC iPlayer site here .

As I have in past years, I'll occasionally bring to your attention a concert that I thought was particularly enjoyable.

If you have a spare 19 hours one of the highlights of the Proms this year is the Staatskapelle Berlin under Daniel Barenboim rendering Wagner's Ring Cycle: 1. Das Rheingold,July 22; Die Walkure, July 23; Siegfried, July 26 & Gotterdammerung, July 28.

Two other Wagner opera will be presented as well Tristan und Isolde (7/27)and Tannhauser (8/4).

Wagner is 200 this year and a 7 month festival celebrating his works will be presented in London...wish I could attend in person. I'd gladly put up with fish and chips (heavy on the vinegar) and jellied eels if I could be present for the entire Ring cycle.

Earlier this evening in London the Santa Cecilia Orchestra from Rome, conducted by Sir Antonio Pappano, concluded Prom 10 with a fine performance of one of my favorites, the huge Rachmaninoff 2nd Symphony. This is available for 7 days at the BBC iPlayer site here (fast forward about 25 minutes for the beginning of the Rachmaninoff).

Absolutely outstanding! I too love this symphony above all his orchestra works. Pappano has an operatic feel for this symphony and reveals real drama in the music and also tender sweetness. His climaxes are so natural sounding and masterful. There is yearning and drive...wonderfully paced.

I could not be more impressed with the orchestra. I've not regarded them highly, but with this performance, they've exhibited real style and a central European/Anglo-American sound combination for which I was unprepared. The symphony performance also has an idiomatic feel to it. I am stunned and hope the BBC puts out this concert (with audience noise and all). I am now compelled to listen to his 2011 recording on EMI with the same orchestra which received fine reviews. This performance goes to the top of my list. Really moving...thanks very much for the tip.

Lee, was delighted to read of your enjoyment of the performance. As I mentioned in the previous post, I was looking forward to it(I'd heard the 2011 recording you mention), but both Pappano and the orchestra exceeded my expectations.

Thanks for this. I'm going to try to access some of the Proms through Sonos since I don't have iPlayer linked to my stereo system. But you did inspire me and I am now listening to Karajan conducting the Alexis Weissenberg and the Berliner Philharmonic playing the Rach 2.

Pat, I hope that you can get full access to the programming. The BBC Proms home site is here . Clicking on "Listen in HD" in the upper right corner gets the live Proms broadcasts and other Radio 3 programs. The 7 day "Listen Again" feature can be brought up by clicking on the calendar dates of the performance. A different link to the Rachmaninoff 2nd Symphony performance that Lee and I enjoyed is here .

The other route to this is by installing the iPlayer. The iPlayer help page is here . With access to the iPlayer, its basic program listing page is here .

The Proms this year is featuring performances of all the Tchaikovsky symphonies, and earlier this evening concluded the concert with probably my favorite of them, the 4th. The BBC National Orchestra of Wales, conducted by Jac van Steen, presented a very energetic performance. Available for 7 days here on the iPlayer site(fast forward about 44 minutes to the beginning of the Tchaikovsky).

A Prom concert I missed previously was rebroadcast on the Radio 3 afternoon program earlier today. The new National Youth Orchestra of the U.S.A. was conducted by Valery Gergiev in a program that featured the Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto with Joshua Bell as soloist and Shostakovich's massive 10th Symphony(with an encore of selections from Gershwin's Porgy and Bess). After beginning with a seemingly almost obligatory new composition which consisted of about 7 minutes of noise(receiving its first and probably last public performance), the young musicians presented the Tchaikovsky and Shostakovich pieces very well. In fact they played remarkably well, especially considering that they were between 16 and 19 and had only gotten together a few weeks previously. This rebroadcast is also available for 7 days on the iPlayer site .